Monday, December 23, 2013

From NPR (by Philip Reeves)
It is a bizarre nightly ritual that is deeply embedded in the British way of life.
You
switch off the TV, lock up the house, slip into bed, turn on your
radio, and begin to listen to a mantra, delivered by a soothing,
soporific voice.
"Viking, North Utsire, South Utsire, Forties, Cromarty, Forth, Tyne, Dogger ...." says the voice.
You
are aware — vaguely — that these delicious words are names, and that
those names refer to big blocks of sea around your island nation,
stretching all the way up to Iceland and down to North Africa.

The BBC's beloved Shipping Forecast bulletin covers 31 sea
areas, the names of which have inspired poets, artists and singers and
become embedded into the national psyche.

Your mind begins to swoop across the landscape, sleepily checking
the shorelines, from the gray waters of the English Channel to the
steely turbulence of the Atlantic.
Somewhere, deep in your
memory, stir echoes of British history — of invasions from across the
sea by Vikings, Romans and Normans; of battles with Napoleon's galleons
and Hitler's U-boats.
Finally, as the BBCs Shipping Forecast bulletin draws to a
close, you nod off, complacent in the knowledge that whatever storms are
blasting away on the oceans out there, you're in your pajamas, sensibly
tucked up at home.
The fact that you know nothing much about
the sea, and cannot tell a freighter from a futtock (part of a wooden
hull), is beside the point.
For you, listening to the BBC's Shipping Forecast every night is about something else entirely.
You're
paying homage to an institution that is as much part of the jigsaw that
makes up Britain's national culture as drizzle and warm beer.

Why does the Shipping Forecast mean so much to so many in the U.K.?
For one, the weather still actually matters for many coastal communities, such as the tiny island of Lundy off the Southwest of England, home to 28 people.
There's the Tyne in the Northeast
— one of the 31 sea areas that feature in the forecast — once a
maritime hub for Britain's mighty coal and shipbuilding industries where
the "Geordies" are now striving to find a new role for their community.
And in the ancient southern seaside town of Hastings, the same families
have been fishing for centuries.

More In The Series

This is "Sailing By" composed by Ronald Binge in 1963, and performed by the Alan Perry/William Gardner Orchestra, and is the version used by the BBC for its late night shipping forecast.Sailing By is played every night on BBC Radio 4 at around 00:45hrs before the late Shipping Forecast. Its tune is repetitive, assisting in its role of serving as a signal for sailors tuning in to be able to easily identify the radio station.

It also functions as a buffer — depending on when the final programme before closedown finishes, Sailing By (or part of it) is played as a 'filler' as the shipping forecast starts at 00:48hrs precisely.

The initial reason for its introduction was because of the indeterminate finish time for the preceding Midnight News, leading to filling music being played until the Shipping Forecast was due to start. Sailing By was added to allow for a clear break between the end of the music and the start of the forecast

But for many Britons, the Shipping Forecast is much more
significant than a weather bulletin for the fishermen and sailors who
make their living from the oceans.
A very large number of regular listeners are landlubbers.
They are, however, fiercely loyal.BBC Radio 4 broadcasts the Shipping Forecast four times a day,
but the late-night bulletin — shortly before 1 a.m. — possesses a
particular mystique.
It's not uncommon for listeners to ask for the
music that introduces it — "Sailing By" — to be played at their
funerals.
A few years back, when someone suggested changing the
bulletin's timing by just 12 minutes, there were angry speeches in
Parliament and indignant newspaper editorials.
Listeners brandishing banners demonstrated outside the BBC's London headquarters.
The idea was eventually abandoned.

A Mysterious, And Inspiring, Appeal

Exactly
why the Shipping Forecast is held in such affectionate esteem by the
British public is a topic of considerable discussion in the U.K.
Many
people compare the forecast with listening to poetry.
The BBC's Arlene
Fleming is one of the presenters of the forecast: "It is poetry! ...
There is a natural rhythm to it," she says, "just like the sea."
This may help explain why the Shipping Forecast has enthused so many artists over the years.
It
has inspired poetry by neighboring Ireland's late, great Seamus Heaney
and also Britain's Poet Laureate Carol Anne Duffy.
It arises in art;
it's referenced in TV shows, movies and songs — such as Blur's "This is a Low," and Thomas Dolby's "Windpower," which actually ends with a sample from a broadcast.
A
snippet from the bulletin cropped up in Danny Boyle's widely acclaimed
opening ceremony of the 2012 London Olympics. Comedians aplenty have tried their hands at parodies of the forecast.
Peter Jefferson presented the Shipping Forecast on the BBC's airwaves for 40 years.
In his book And Now The Shipping Forecast,
Jefferson offers this explanation: "There is something in many of us
that likes the certainties of life and is averse to change.
"The
Shipping Forecast is a comfort, a given, a sign that maybe, just maybe,
everything is alright with the world after all — until the next day
dawns, anyway — but that's a few hours of delicious sleep away! Time for
the febrile mind to repair itself, rest, chill out, relax and take
gentle stock of things."

Links :

CNN : The voice that launched a nation's dreams: Magic of the shipping forecast